Papua New Guinea - Butterfly dangling

Note : You can have the two pieces of the coin as two separate necklaces or earrings.To use this offer please add a note in the custom field saying: "as two necklaces" or "as earrings"

If you are having it as two necklaces and if you choose Handmade Thread in Chain Options you will receive each pendant with its own handmade thread.With the other chain choice options you will need to add an extra chain from our chain page,to do that please click here

Birdwing butterflies are actually three different genuses of butterfly with many different species. According to the Bank of Papua New Guinea, the species portrayed on this coin is Ornithoptera paradisea, which is often called 'the most desirable birdwing the world over'. The brightly coloured males reach 135 mm in size, and good quality specimens sell for hundreds of dollars.

10 Fun Facts about Butterflies

1.Do butterflies sleep? At night, or when it’s cloudy or cool outside, butterflies land and might look like they are sleeping. But they never close their eyes. They don’t have eyelids!

To see or be seen? They look a lot like eyes, so don’t be fooled by the spots on this Giant Owl’s (Caligo memnon) wings.

2. How do butterflies see? Butterflies have two eyes just like we do. But butterfly eyes are called compound eyes because they have many, many lenses. That means butterflies can see many different things in many directions all at the same time. Their butterfly brains collect all of that information and make one whole picture from all those tiny parts. Try looking through the special compound lens in the Butterflies LIVE! exhibit space and you’ll see the world just like a butterfly does. Most butterflies can see red, yellow, blue, and green, but some species can see other colors, too.

Lantana flowers as seen through a compound eye. Photo by Lead Butterfly Curator Anna Estep

3. Can butterflies smell? Butterflies don’t have noses. They “smell” with their antennae.

4. How do butterflies eat? Butterflies don’t eat. They drink! They use their mouth, called a proboscis, like a straw to sip their food. When they’re not drinking, they roll their tongue up and tuck it under their chin.

Proboscis coiled and antennae on alert, this Torquatus Swallowtail (Papipo torquatus) is ready to soak up some sweet nectar.

5. Can butterflies taste? Butterflies “taste” with their feet! Tiny organs on a butterfly’s feet can sense the chemical signature of anything they land on. That’s how they know if something is good to eat.

6. What do butterflies drink? Butterflies like to sip nectar from flowers and juice from fruit, which gives them plenty of sugar for energy. But they also need salts and minerals that they get from “puddling” — drinking out of mud puddles, or wet spots on the ground. A group of male butterflies enjoying a puddle together is called a “puddle club.”

7. How do butterflies defend themselves? The bright color patterns on some butterfly’s wings help them hide them from predators by blending in with the other colors in the garden. Other butterflies taste bad (or look like other butterflies that do), which is a warning to hungry predators to stay away. Some are even poisonous.

A orange oakleaf or deadleaf butterfly (Kallima inachus) passes as a dried leaf thanks to some clever camouflage.

8. Do butterflies have bones and muscles and skin like we do? A butterfly’s skeleton is not inside their body, but on the outside and is called the exoskeleton. Its like having skin made of bones. They have muscles just like we do, and that’s how they move.

9. How many wings does a butterfly have? A butterfly has four wings. A pair of fore wings in the front and two hind wings in the back. When they fly, their wings move up and down in a figure-eight pattern. A group of butterflies flying together isn’t called a flock — it’s a “flutter!”

It’s clear that butterfly wings are transparent, even though they are covered with thousands of tiny scales that reflect light in different ways to make different colors. Julia (Drayas julia)

10. How do butterflies communicate with each other? Butterfliesdon’t need to do much communicating. They sometimes move their wings to send a message. And because they can see ultraviolet light, they look for the ultraviolet light patterns on each others wings that identify their species and gender.